Wishes in the Night – The Beloved (Audio)

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The night sounds rise and fall around me

As stars emerge from the deep black well

Fireflies dance on the edge of vision

As dusk gives way to the night

Coolness settles upon the land

Stillness settles upon my heart

Tiny pinpricks of light appear

Delicate, peeping through the black curtain

Now soft pearl glow cast across the silence

Each moment brings the detail into focus

So too my heart’s desire becomes clear

Defined against the backdrop of my soul’s quietude

My wish is for you

And my wish for you is me

That you might be filled with me as the emptiness of space

Is filled with glorious light

That I might be to you the peace

Which settles over the night calling nature to rest

A night with no bumps in the dark.

No fear of exposure

No longer watchful

Only rest and blissful surrender

And if I may not have this wish then my next would be

That you may see yourself through my eyes

Then you would not need my light to fill your night

You would know the power in your form, the elegance in your movement

You would know your beauty as a gift and light to this dark and troubled world

You are most desirable in all things

And from that place of confident rest your striving would cease

You would become a source of grace and hope

And would lift up all whom you touch

If I might be granted even my second wish

I would know that my life has had a meaning

For I have recognized the sublime among the ordinary

To have held such to my breast is to have lived

Garden Update

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I like playing in my garden.  No mater what else is going on there is something there I can do that will make a difference in the outcome.  There is so much in the world that can not be depended on and remains outside of one’s control.  The garden is a place I can go that just is.  I can work a little and even leave it and it will go on without me, always happy for me to return.  I am not the magic there just a steward, a husband to the magic of life that occurs within Her.

20150502_134133I broke down about 20 empty cardboard wine cases to use as a weed barrier.  Then wet them down with water.  It is a good use of what would have been waste and will eventually become part of the soil.  My grandmother used old newspaper in a similar way.

20150502_155255Now there is fresh straw.  Like Epcot, only different.  It makes for a good foundation aesthetically as the plants mature.  It helps with the weed control and retention of moisture during the warmer months.

20150502_141425Gonna give the plants in the raised bed a week or two, then give them some straw to rest on.  As you can see the space I chose was not perfect in terms of the sun’s arc.  There is plenty of morning sun but around two the shade gets to some of the plants.  They will be fine as the sun climbs higher into the sky with the changing seasons.  It reminds me that many times the perfect situation never presents itself.  There always seems to be something in the way.  But what I do know is that perfect fruit can come from imperfect situations.

20150502_141436The Cucamelon seeds have sprouted and are ready to go in the ground.  I’ve planted some and have several to give away to some friends who want to do something a little different.  We should have plenty in a couple months.  This process is so amazing to me.  How is it that we have gotten so far away from the knowledge that sustained my grandparents?

20150502_155232There the are with the tomatoes.  I used some cut bamboo from last year.  I will make them a trellis as the grow.

20150502_185916-1God these pictures suck but they are what I got.  We do what we call “Wine and Jazz” once a month during the warm months at the winery.  You can see an arbor I built three years ago.  Grapes are growing up it.  The flower bed is awaiting the lantania to sprout to fill in between the lavender and the rosemary.

20150502_185825The people are beginning to arrive.  We served mufalattas, red beans and rice, and gumbo, and wine of course.  This is where I usually sit to watch and listen to the music and the people.  Sometimes I get up and talk or serve or to smile at someone.  I gave one guy who was interested in the garden a cucamelon plant to take home and watch grow.  He was fun to talk to.  But mainly now I just watch and listen and think on things.  The band was good.  The lead was a young but very talented jazz standard and R&B singer.  She was really good.  It made me smile and remember when the songs were alive.  Be Groovy!

Bare Feet Running – Missing Her (Audio)

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Boy, shirtless, bare feet accustomed to the earth, shaggy chocolate locks lightened by the sun
Favorite ragged cut-offs tentatively hang on narrow hips
The slap, slap, slap of his stride down a well packed earthen path
Something slows and stirs and calls him to leave that way

He lay in a field of deep spring grasses
The warm earth held him, he made a bed between the sharp stiff stems and the soft grasses beneath
The buzz of insects, the call of birds, cow mooing in the distance
Grass and flower and Oak and cattle hung warmly over that place, moved about by the wind

No one had suggested it, there was no Youtube then teaching Westerners to breathe
Perhaps it was the connection of his bare feet to the soil and Her children
Perhaps it was the warmth and the buzz and the fragrance and the light and the tastes on the wind that called to him
His senses connected with the earth created a space there under the wide sky

He breathed in and out without thinking, without knowing that he matched the rhythms of Her
He felt Her pushing back holding him aloft as he lay still as a heavy and ancient stone
His mind began to sleep as his awareness awakened
Gazing deeply into the worlds that exist only in the white shifting shapes above him

He thought things that could not fit or be contained in a word
He thought, he felt, he knew without effort, it just was
He felt connected to Her in a real and material way, the boy was still, yet aware that he moved
She moved, the Earth turned and he turned with Her

He lay there out of time, floating, spinning, senses outgrown by the depth of him
Then, another call like a voice through water claimed his attention
The spinning slowed, the heaviness of him lightened, he remembered the warmth and the buzz and the fragrance and the light
Soon the slap, slap, slap of his bare feet on the hard packed dirt, all he thought was “That was so cool.” . . . bare feet running

He grinned and continued on his way thinking to return there someday.
He just remembered, feet no longer running
Perhaps I should
Perhaps I should have long ago

Pine Wood Floors – Mama Taylor

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I awakened to the sound of footsteps on the pine wood floors. The cold air on my face. I was warm there underneath the many layers of quilts she had tucked us into the night before. They were heavy and comforting, holding me safe in the warm bed. She always said goodnight with a kiss and a hug, her soft skin smelling of Noxzema. I still love how Noxzema smells, probably because of how much I loved her. The footsteps belonged to my grandfather. Each morning before daylight he would light the heaters. The scrape and strike of the sulfur kitchen matches, the smell of gas and the whoosh of the gas igniting. Soon the fragrance of the rich black coffee and cigarette smoke would drift in as I drifted back out. It was a cold wet Louisiana winter.

We had been outside working in the garden, weeding and planting and preparing. Well, my grandmother did most of the work. The kids were here and there, running, exploring, climbing our favorite trees. She had the best trees. A boy could lose himself in one of those. My favorite was an ancient Holly in her front yard. I would sit at the top of it for hours, suspended there between heaven and earth. The birds would light in the branches just feet away from me and if I was very still I could watch them, unseen. Cardinals, Finches, Blue Jays, Mockingbirds all came and taught me of the world. The smells of spring mingled in the clean fresh air swaying my perch back and forth. I was a king for a little while. She called us in to eat lunch, then set about arranging us on the knotty pine floor. Pallets she called them and we were expected to sleep. The heavy quilts from the winter now laid out for our nap. She turned on her little black and white T.V. and as it warmed up that same song and that picture of an hourglass told us that it was time for silence. She sat in her chair with my grandfather’s belt rolled up in her lap and was quick to use it on us if we stirred. Because her “Stories were on . . .”

One summer it rained fish. Small bass and bream and minnows were flopping in the grass. We asked her how they had gotten there. She explained how during violent storms over water small fish can sometimes be swept up in the currents of the wind and dropped again miles away. She knew everything. How to find worms for fishing. How to fish. How to clean and cook that fish. How to make things grow. How to make us grow. And she taught us when we would listen. One of my favorite memories of her was sitting on her screened porch nestled under her arm. Warm and close without a fear or worry in the world. There was a violent thunderstorm raging around that place of utter calm and contentment. The forked light streaking, splitting the sky. A clap and a rumble and a boom of thunder shaking the earth. The smell of clean ozone and the fresh summer rain. I still love the storms, and the smell of Noxzema, and growing things, and fishing, and understanding how things work. I think God must have a swing like that. Those moments there on the swing and a thousand others like them remain with me even now. She is the picture of grace to me.

One winter day I received a call saying that something was wrong at her house. Rushing there and running inside I saw her laying on that pine wood floor. Paramedics pushing on her chest, breathing air into her, forcing it into her lungs, her belly distended, color a pale gray. She did not move or speak or react in any way to their efforts. I really did not understand what was going on as the men quickly placed her on a stretcher and rushed her away under the lights and the screams and the roaring of the ambulance. I saw her a few days later, laying in her coffin. Her hair was done and she was wearing a pretty dress. There were flowers and many people around. There was that strange funeral home smell with way too much perfume on way too many women. I was not sure if it was right or not, and I did not ask. I reached out and touched her skin. So different than the warm softness that I knew. I kissed her forehead and cheek as I had often done. She was not there. She was still teaching me. She taught me grief and great loss. I cried, and I wailed. I had not learned to hide and bury my pain, yet. Then later that day there was food and many people at her house. I think my grandfather lost his way that day. He sat still amidst the bustle of eating and laughing and crying and the telling of memories of her and of our lives together. I was quiet too and watched and listened, not really knowing what to do. I felt very alone and I missed her so, disconnected and adrift, I had no words. But one night sometime after that I dreamed. I could smell the Noxzema, feel her warm soft skin touch me as she called my name. She told me “Boy I’m OK and so are you. Everything is alright.” She teaches me still.

Buddha who? (Audio)

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Baby cries

Bumblebee bumbles

Murmured conversations

Intermittent laughter

Fresh cut grass

Chair rocks

Breathe in, slow deep

Exhale

Siren, ambulance rushes

Watch it pass

Breathe in, slow deep

Exhale

Chair rocks

Thinking of thinking

Let it go

Memories, feelings arise

Observe them

Let them go

Heart slows

Breathe

Anxiety exhaled

Not me

Sadness on the wind

Blows over me

Not me

Let it go

See the motion

Watch from stillness

Enlightenment

No

But it is better than crazy as a run over dog